Thanks for all the great replies!
Retag and push to a local registry. Lots of options out there for setting one up.
Honestly, you already have the image locally if you’ve pulled it. You don’t really need to run a registry unless you’re dead set on it. You can also flatten and export containers for backup if you really want.
Two good points here OP. Type
docker image ls
to see all the images you currently have locally - you’ll possibly be surprised how many. All the ones tagged<none>
are old versions.If you’re already using github, it includes an package repository you could push retagged images to, or for more self-hosty, a local instance of Forgejo would be a good option.
Honestly, you already have the image locally if you’ve pulled it.
I guess not everyone treats their PC as an ephemeral storage, huh? I don’t trust anything that’s available only locally to survive.
Well the question is about a container disappearing from a public registry, in which case nothing would happen if it’s already pulled locally. Figuring where to go from there is the other half of that problem.
Then backup whatever you set your docker local storage to?
The vast majority of selfhosters probably don’t but if you want its called a private repository
Just use a sonatype nexus 3 image and proxy docker hub, etc. Then you pull images through it.
We run this at work so we have forever copies of image tags and to reduce dockerhub rate limit issues. Works well even for a large dev team.
At my job, we run goharbor.io and use its Replications feature to do just that.
Sorry for the link dump - I just glanced over the content and it seems like this might help you:
https://www.warpbuild.com/blog/docker-mirror-setup
https://medium.com/@shaikrish27/deploying-a-docker-registry-mirror-as-a-container-59565ff92c48
https://blog.alexellis.io/how-to-configure-multiple-docker-registry-mirrors/
I mean you have the current image cached on the local server when you use it.